
As you know me well by this point, it is probably a surprise to nobody that once I managed to access the magical place known as the Internet, I started reading on some of my favorite games. Maybe one day, I’ll dig it up and introduce it to you as well…įor now though, let’s go back to Rayman. Length-wise, my Rayman 2 ‘review’ was comparable to the first paragraph of this piece but it granted me my own dedicated space on the page and a copy of a Winnie the Pooh video game – Pooh’s Party Game: In Search of the Treasure – which was basically a Mario Party clone. Still, White being a young lad, wasn’t allowed to play your Duke Nukems and GTAs. Seeing how I ended up becoming a lore expert on Hitman, I fail to see it influencing me much. Years back, I sent it to a magazine (remember these?) focused on non-violent video games. Interestingly enough, my first ever piece of published work was a tiny written review of said product. And if you’ve been following me for a while or… well… looked at the title of this piece… you know I just replayed Rayman 2: The Great Escape! Today, we will be looking at my favorite childhood game. If you’ve read last month’s piece, you probably already know where this is going. Be it Super Mario 64, Banjo Kazooie, Crash Bandicoot, Spyro The Dragon or even more obscure ones like Bugs Bunny: Lost in Time, Gex: Enter the Gecko (get outta here, you lizard!) or Rocket: Robots on Wheels.

Almost every time I hear people discussing games they’ve played as a kid, they mention some title belonging to the genre. Many elements of this level are carried over into the stage in SSF2, such as a mushroom that propels Rayman to another platform and piranha-infested waters that must be crossed using lily pads.When it comes to childhood video games, it seems like there’s nothing better than a 3D character platformer.

#Rayman 2 the great escape the fairy glade part 2 free#
It is a forest space that Rayman enters in order to find the Robo-Pirate stronghold where Ly the Fairy is held captive and eventually free her. The Fairy Glade, also called the Fairy's Glade, is the second level in Rayman 2: The Great Escape (except in the Game Boy Color version, in which it is the first level). The Fairy Glade in Rayman 2: The Great Escape. Its large size, high main platforms, and distant lily pad platforms allow for excessive camping and defensive play, and the mushroom on the main platform intrudes on fights due to forcing players that jump on or near it to bounce up to the highest platform. This stage is banned in competitive play. The other alternate music track is Chasing a Dream, an upbeat remix of the theme that plays in the second, third, and fourth sections of the Land of the Livid Dead in Rayman Origins.One of the alternate music tracks is Rayman 2 Main Theme, an upbeat remix of the main theme of Rayman 2: The Great Escape.

